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August 2016  

Policy&Practice

49

WHAT IF

continued from page 33

Internet of Me:

Connected Devices

Reinvent Self-Service

Online public portals and mobile

apps allow citizens to check eligi-

bility for services, apply for and

manage benefits, and coordinate with

agencies and service providers. The

convergence of connected devices

and digital data from third-party

sources extends the art of the possible

in self service, empowering citizens

and improving caseworker effective-

ness. This is the Internet of Things,

the next generation of mobility. In

addition to smartphones and tablets,

everyday objects such as wearables,

cars, and homes are connected. Such

devices can expand contextual data

that agencies have about their clients.

This creates a mechanism to tailor

health and human service delivery

at scale—providing information and

experiences customized to who people

are and what they need.

What if agencies delivered “My

Human Services” based on insight

from mobile digital identification? The

concept of a personal digital profile

is common in other industries. In

health care, electronic medical records

provide a single patient profile that

can be accessed by health care teams

over time and often across institutional

boundaries. Credit card companies

use digital profiles to track anomalies

in cardholders’ spending patterns to

prevent fraud.

By digitally transmitting and

managing customer information from

connected devices with proper security

and governance, agencies increase

client centricity and deliver services

proactively. This is revolutionary.

Instead of relying on caseworkers and

clients to “feed the system,” the system

feeds itself. It is insight-driven, making

connections and triggering next-best-

actions so agencies work differently.

Intelligent Automation:

Humans and Machines

Working in Harmony

Software that learns can dra-

matically change how human service

agencies work, reallocating precious

resources, including time, money, and

expertise. This is workforce efficiency

for the digital age. It is a common-

sense approach to automating

transactional tasks to improve service

delivery and lower costs. Caseworkers

are freed up for vital judgment work.

Customers are also empowered—

spending less time tracking basic

services and more time charting their

path to self-sufficiency.

What if agencies could determine

program eligibility in real time without

any caseworker intervention? It is

already happening with no-touch

processing. Case in point: The Ohio

Integrated Eligibility System uses

no-touch processing for intake and

case creation, relying on state and

federally defined program rules to

determine eligibility. Citizens can

apply online and receive near real-

time eligibility determination without

worker intervention. Today, more than

60 percent of applications have some

form of automated processing.

As agencies implement intelligent

automation, they must determine

the best-use cases. It is also critical to

rethink policy, building rules and toler-

ances that will affect all facets of the

organization.

FromWhat If to What’s Now

Analytics, Internet of Things, and

Intelligent Automation are human

service game changers. To benefit,

agencies must invest strategically and

address the organizational impact

broadly. Funding mechanisms and

approaches must also evolve to take

advantage of these new tools.

This is how human service agencies

can build the foundation for tomor-

row’s digital human services agency.

It is a bright future—proactive,

client-centric services with agile,

insight-driven operations so agencies

move up the Human Services Value

Curve.

Debora Morris

is the managing

director, Accenture Health

and Human Services Growth and

Strategy Lead.

SeanToole

is the managing director at

Accenture Human Services.

agencies delivered “My

Human Services” based on

data insight frommobile

digital identification?

agencies coulddetermine

programeligibility in

real timewithout any

caseworker intervention?

Analytics, Internet of Things, and Intelligent Automationare

human service game changers. To benefit, agenciesmust invest

strategically and address the organizational impact broadly.

Fundingmechanisms and approachesmust also evolve to take

advantage of these new tools.